Embattled Denver Broncos linebacker Von Miller is dealing with traffic issues not just in Colorado, but in California as well.

Court records in Orange County, Calif., show Miller, who is serving a six-game suspension for violating the NFL's substance abuse policy, had an unresolved speeding ticket from 2012, when he was cited for exceeding a 65 MPH speed limit on March 8, 2012.

Online court records show Miller failed to resolve the ticket by July 2012.

Miller's attorney and agent told USA TODAY Sports that there was no warrant for Miller, and if there was any outstanding money owed it would be paid by Thursday morning.

Mark Schamel, Miller's Washington D.C.-based attorney, issued a statement to USA TODAY Sports on Wednesday evening in which he described the California incident as "a simple infraction" that did not result in the issuance of a warrant. Schamel said the issue would be resolved by Thursday.

"This is not a criminal case and we have confirmed that there is no warrant for his arrest," Schamel said. "This is much ado about nothing."

But it just the latest negative headline for Miller since he began appealing his NFL suspension in late July. First, he was arrested on a warrant for failing to appear in an Arapahoe County, Colo., court on an October 2012 traffic ticket. Miller was arrested during an off-day during training camp, at a gun club near the Broncos' training facility.

Miller then was cited for speeding and driving on a suspended license in Arapahoe County, Colo., last week. He was not arrested in that incident, and his father, Von Sr., was allowed to drive the vehicle.

"Everyone here has an individual responsibility to not only themselves but to this organization as well as to this football team. It's something we're not pleased about, and we'll leave it at that," Fox said.

The NFL, through a spokesman, and the Broncos, declined comment on the California citation.

"We are looking into it," Broncos spokesman Patrick Smyth said.

The traffic incidents should not result in any further discipline from the NFL, which is under the substance abuse policy. Behavioral issues away from the field fall under the personal conduct policy, and traffic citations, even repeated ones, do not generally lead to league discipline.

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